Updated
Updated · NBC News · May 29
US Norovirus Stays High as GII.17 Drives 75% of Outbreaks
Updated
Updated · NBC News · May 29

US Norovirus Stays High as GII.17 Drives 75% of Outbreaks

2 articles · Updated · NBC News · May 29
  • Wastewater surveillance shows norovirus at “high” levels across much of the U.S., with concentrations still rising in the Northeast and a notable outbreak signal in the San Francisco Bay Area.
  • GII.17, a mutated strain that partially evades prior immunity, became the dominant U.S. variant in 2024-25 and caused about 75% of outbreaks, helping the virus spread even though experts say it is not inherently more contagious.
  • 1,194 outbreaks were recorded by CDC’s NoroSTAT from Aug. 1 to May 7, down from 2,534 a year earlier and broadly in line with seasonal averages, suggesting wastewater may be catching illnesses that never reach formal reporting.
  • Up to seven other people can be infected by one patient on average, with late-spring travel, indoor crowding during extreme heat, contaminated food and shared surfaces all aiding transmission.
  • Most people recover within several days but can keep spreading the virus for up to two weeks; doctors advise oral rehydration, soap-and-water handwashing and EPA-registered disinfectants, noting antibiotics and many hand sanitizers do not work.
A mutated 'vomiting bug' evades immunity and hand sanitizer. Are we defenseless against this year's widespread outbreaks?
A new antiviral is now in human trials. Could this finally stop the miserable norovirus outbreaks sweeping the nation?
This stomach bug costs society $60 billion yearly. Is a new drug our only hope to stop this massive economic drain?